Geography

Pronunciation

The name's pronunciation contradicts ordinary German orthographic rules and is more similar to English standard pronunciation. The name derives from the old word "Aue", meaning floodplain, and kept its ancient pronunciation.

References

Owen (name)

Owen is an anglicized variant of the Welsh name Owain, and may appear as both a personal name and as a surname (with or without the s as in Owens[son of Owen] ). It can also be an anglicised version of the Irish Eoghan.
Notable people with the surname or first name of Owen include:

Plot: Dan Webster lives a privileged life where everything is carefully managed for him. He dreams of becoming a professional musician in spite of his fathers intentions. His pampered world is shattered when he witnesses a brutal murder and is forced to run. Hunted by those he once trusted he is propelled into a world that is alien to him. He takes refuge in a small town where his only plan is to survive and his only friend is out of reach. Alone and with no one to look after him, Dan reaches out to Michael for strength and Angelica for love, inadvertently placing them in peril. Dan has underestimated the ruthlessness of his enemy

Plot: Five-year-old Emma follows a feral boy into the woods and is lost for two days. Remembering nothing of her ordeal, she avoids the woods, until seventeen years later when she accompanies a group of environmental students up a mountain to catch forestry students suspected of illegal foresting. When people go missing and bodies begin to surface, the groups join forces, but before they can make it back down the mountain, they stumble across a hunter's cabin and Emma comes face to face with the dark mystery of her past.

Plot: Paul, Matt, and Will (in their 30s) have been friends for years. They converge at the seaside for the weekend, each with a boyfriend in tow. Paul is with Ben, his companion of five years: their relationship is on the rocks after months of Paul's moodiness since his brother Mark died. Matt brings Owen, whom he's dated for three months and wants to live with; to everyone else, they seem singularly incompatible. Will brings Adam, a 20-year old one-night stand, to meet "happy, well-adjusted homosexuals." As the six men, joined by Mark's lover, James, sort through their own relationships as well as new ones begun during the weekend, happiness and being well adjusted prove elusive.

Plot: World War I: an allied squadron and a German squadron face off daily in the skies. Manfred von Richtofen, the Red Baron, leads one, and, although one of his decisions cost the life of his predecessor, he expects his men to honor codes of conduct. The allied squad has similar class divisions: its colonel, an aristocrat, laments that men he considers peasants are now fliers, including a cynical and ruthless Canadian, Roy Brown, the squad's ace. As the tactics of both sides break more rules and become more destructive, the Baron must decide if he is a soldier first or part of the ruling class. He and Brown have two aerial battles, trivial in the larger scheme yet tragic.

Keywords: aerial-combat, biplane, character-name-in-title, embroidery, fighter-pilot, fighter-plane, independent-film, part-fiction, triplane, world-war-oneGenres: Action,
Drama,
War,
Taglines: On April 21, 1918, the Red Baron of Germany and the Black Sheep of the R.A.F. met in the skies of France for the last time!

Quotes:

Canadian Reporter: Lieutenant Brown, the readers of the Toronto Star want to know about Canada's newest Ace.::Roy Brown: What is there to know? I'm just a technician; I change things.::Canadian Reporter: Change things?::Roy Brown: Put a plane in front of me, with a man in it, I change them into a wreck and a corpse.::Canadian Reporter: Well... well how do you like France?::Roy Brown: It's a nice country, isn't it? Lots of my friends will be staying after the war.::Canadian Reporter: Ah... how do you like the French girls, Lieutenant?::Roy Brown: With both their arms and legs, I think.::Canadian Reporter: [coughs]... the German planes, are they dangerous?::Roy Brown: The Germans, they're dangerous. The planes, they're dangerous too. They kill as many Germans as we do, the same way ours do us.::Canadian Reporter: But now that we outnumber the Germans, we're... we're winning, aren't we?::Roy Brown: How in Christ's name do I know? I go out in the morning and try to stay alive till I run out of petrol. One day I come back and they tell me I'm an Ace.::Canadian Reporter: But you've... you've shot down eight German planes!::Roy Brown: Is it eight? God Almighty I thought it was a hundred. I keep shooting him down but he's always up there in the morning. How the hell do I know who's winning the war? One of these mornings...::Canadian Reporter: One of these mornings, it'll all be over.::Roy Brown: How can it be over? There's still some of us alive. They wouldn't end it with any of us alive, now would they?

Reporter: You started the war as a cavalry officer, yeah?::Baron Manfred von Richthofen: Yeah.::Reporter: So, now, how does it feel to fly? To fight in the sky?::Baron Manfred von Richthofen: My ancestors were Teutonic knights; I've merely exchanged my horse for an airplane.::Reporter: [laughing] I see, so the flying is just a means to an end?::Baron Manfred von Richthofen: The flying is wonderful! But it's the hunt that I find most satisfying: the stalking, the chase, and finally the kill. The climax.::Reporter: Oh, so you enjoy it sir?::Baron Manfred von Richthofen: What should I say? War is the father of nations. It makes them slaves or it makes them free. Victory brings with it a climax, a sense of fulfillment.::Reporter: But the danger! Every day, every minute! While you are in the air...::Baron Manfred von Richthofen: I never think of it. It's like the weather: always there. But when you hunt, you think about your hunting, don't you?

Roy Brown: [Walking away from another pilot after an argument on the firing range, when the other officer turns his machine gun to Brown but does not use it] What's the matter? You can't shoot a man in the back if he's not in a plane?

Ugly On The Inside

The lightening in this roomDoesn't do a thing for you and your complexionI'm sorry but it's the truthYou look like the goddamn living deadBut honestly I don't careHow you do or don't your hairYou're ugly on the insideThe makeup that you use to catch some eyesAnd hide your imperfectionsDoes little to concealAn ego that's been bruised many timesBut you've left it at homeWith your underwearBut honestly I don't mindWho you do or don't todayYou're still ugly on the insideYou've got time to changeNow go ahead and drink those drinksDrunk again

Eddie Jones says the decision to promote OwenFarrell to England co-captain has helped push the 27-year-old's performances to "another level". Farrell was promoted from vice-captain to work alongside Dylan Hartley as joint captain for England during their autumn internationals ... "I just think he is really growing as a leader. England vs Australia ... 3.21....

London&nbsp;— He was not captain, allowed George Ford to continue goalkicking, did not score any points and played only 40 minutes, but OwenFarrell was the key to England turning a 15-10 deficit into a 35-15 victory over Japan on Saturday....